Named Entity Results, Paul Hayne

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expected to excel; but, while the list of rhymsters was longer than Leporello's, the poets hardly exceeded in number the writers of prose.
Thompson, Meek, Simms, Hayne, Timrod and McCord were the few names that had gone over the border.
Up to that time, however, the South had never produced any great poem, that was to stand aerets like this would be sheer failure; and where many did so well, it were invidious to discriminate.
The names of John R. Thompson, James Randall, Henry Timrod, Paul Hayne, Barron Hope, Margaret Preston, James Overall, Harry Lyndon Flash and Frank Ticknor had already become household words in the South, where they will live forevebrook, that pure Vestal in the temple of Mars?
Every tear of sympathy that fell upon its pages was a jewel above rubies, in the crown of its gentle author.
Paul Hayne had won already the hearts of his own readers; and had gained transatlantic meed, in Tennyson's declaration that he was the sonneteer of America!
And the yearn

ur men. But let me tell you, sir, that beside these graves, I swear by heaven to avenge their desecration.
If it is honorable for you to disturb the dead, I shall consider it an honor, and will make it my ambition, to disturb your living.
I shall fancy, sir, the voice of the departed ones from their desecrated homes, exclaiming that such a nation may truly say to Corruption, thou art my father; to Dishonor, thou art my mother; Vandalism, thou art my ambition. W. Miles Hazzard.
Ode by Paul Hayne.
I. The night and its stillness were ‘round him, And the spell of solitude bound him With a feeling of awe, as his footsteps drew nigh The spot where the bones of his forefathers lie, On the island whose tropical wildwood Had rung to the laugh of his childhood; And he paused with a sigh where the low branches fall From the oak, and the willow o'ershadowing the wall Of the church-yard, that sleeps pale and hoary 'Neath the moonlighted tremulous glory!
II. He stood in the stillness

erament ever touched more unerringly than in these words?
When Webster himself thundered, at the close of his reply to Hayne in 1830, Union and Liberty, now and forever, one and inseparable, the words sank deeper into the consciousness of the Amellege Case before the Supreme Court, the Plymouth, Bunker Hill, and Adams-Jefferson commemorative orations, the Reply to Hayne, and the Seventh of March speeches in the Senate.
Though he exhibited in his private life something of the prodigal reckr nations has often proved to be when read after the immediate occasion for it has passed.
Single lyrics by Timrod and Paul Hayne, Boker, H. H. Brownell, Read, Stedman, and other men are still full of fire.
Yet Mrs. Howe's Battle Hymn, scribbled ha children repeated it in school, vaguely but truly perceiving in it, as their fathers had perceived in Webster's Reply to Hayne thirty years before, the idea of union made simple, sensuous, passionate.
No American poem has had a more dramatic and